Barra Head Lighthouse

Barra Head Lighthouse
Berneray

The lighthouse close up
Outer Hebrides
Location Barra Head
Outer Hebrides
Scotland
United Kingdom
Coordinates 56°47′08″N 7°39′13″W / 56.78544°N 7.65356°W / 56.78544; -7.65356Coordinates: 56°47′08″N 7°39′13″W / 56.78544°N 7.65356°W / 56.78544; -7.65356
Year first constructed 1833
Automated 23 October 1980
Construction stone tower
Tower shape cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern attached to 1-storey keeper's house
Markings / pattern white tower, black lantern. ochre trim
Height 18 metres (59 ft)
Focal height 208 metres (682 ft)
Current lens rotating fresnel lens
Range 18 nautical miles (33 km; 21 mi)
Characteristic Fl W 15s. [1]
Admiralty number A4020
NGA number 3952
ARLHS number SCO-016
Managing agent Northern Lighthouse Board[2]

Barra Head Lighthouse on Barra Head identifies the southern entrance to The Minch, roughly halfway between the Eilean Glas and Rinns of Islay lighthouses. The 58 foot (18 m) stone tower, built in 1833, stands on the west side of the island, at the top of a very steep cliff, making the light 693 feet (211 m) above sea level, with a range of 16 nautical miles; 29 kilometres (18 mi).[1] There is no shallow water west of Berneray to break the blow of the Atlantic storms and small fish are sometimes thrown onto the grass on the cliff top. In 1836 Sir Archibald Geikie recorded the movement of a 42 long tons (43 t) block of gneiss across 5 feet (1.5 m) of ground during a violent storm.[3][4][5]

History

Designed by Robert Stevenson and built by James Smith of Inverness the light was first exhibited on 15 October 1833.[6] The oil-burning light was converted to incandescent in 1906 and the lighthouse was converted to automatic operation on 23 October 1980, when the last keepers were withdrawn.[1]

The main optic is now an acetylene-operated Dalen revolving pedestal. The fresnel lens rotates every 30 seconds. During daylight hours, the lens rotates at a very slow speed to prevent the mantles from deteriorating in strong sunlight. There are 4 mantles in the exchanger systems. Electrical power is provided by batteries, which are automatically recharged by a diesel alternator twice a week. The equipment is monitored by Hyskeir Lighthouse.[1]

Due to the dangerous landing conditions, Barra Head lighthouse was re-classified by the RNLI as a "Rock Station" early in the 20th century. Two small boats had been swamped and lost in the enormous swell by the slipway at the landing place. The regulations associated with this change prevented both alongside landings by tenders and the lighthouse men keeping dinghies onshore.[7][8] The departure of the last of the crofting families meant an end to regular links by sea and the regular mist and fog rendered signalling unreliable. A system of wireless communications with Castlebay on Barra was therefore proposed and installed by 1925.[9]

The keepers' cemetery

The pier was built in the late 1930s with the approach of war, when a sophisticated radar system was installed to guard the Western Approaches. This involved the landing of hundreds of steel girders and drums containing steel cables used to create three large radar masts, and a robust "Scots Derrick" was erected to crane them ashore.[7]

A small walled cemetery was constructed halfway between the lighthouse and the summit of Sotan for the keepers. This contains the grave of a visiting inspector and those of a number of the keepers' children.[7][10] A Blenheim bomber crashed into the cliffs nearby during World War II, but the wreck was not discovered until many years later by a rock climber.[1][11]

See also


References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Barra Head Lighthouse". Northern Lighthouse Board. Archived from the original on 13 January 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
  2. Barra Head (Berneray) The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 17 May 2016
  3. Haswell-Smith (2004) pp. 207209.
  4. Murray (1996) p. 221.
  5. Murray (1966) p. 232.
  6. Munro (1979) p. 89.
  7. 1 2 3 "The Most Dangerous Landing in Scotland" safetybarrahead.com. Retrieved 30 December 2008.
  8. Munro (1979) p. 191 states that one of these accidents occurred "in the storms of 1877-8".
  9. Munro (1979) p. 213, 223.
  10. Buxton (1995) p. 147.
  11. Buxton (1995) pp. 147, 149.

External links


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